The present invention relates to a device for controlling electric actuators, with automatic current measurement offset compensation, and to the relative operation method.
The present invention may be used to particular advantage, though not exclusively, for controlling solenoid valves controlling intake and exhaust of an automotive internal combustion engine, or for controlling other types of electric actuators, such as solenoid valves of ABS devices and similar, electronic injectors, etc.
As is known, electric actuator control devices typically comprise a power circuit having a number of power blocks, each for supplying current to a corresponding electric actuator; and a driver circuit for controlling operation of the power blocks to regulate current supply to each electric actuator according to a predetermined time pattern.
To do this, the driver circuit comprises a measuring stage connected to the power circuit to determine, instant by instant, the current supplied by each power block to the respective electric actuator; and a control stage, which drives the power blocks to control current supply to the electric actuators, and cooperates with the measuring stage to supply the electric actuator with the desired current.
More specifically, the measuring stage comprises a number of measuring blocks, each of which measures, at each instant, the value of the current flowing through a respective power block, i.e. flowing through the electric actuator, and supplies the control stage with a comparison signal indicating the measured current has reached a current threshold set by the control stage. In other words, by means of each measuring block, the control stage provides for closed-loop current control, in which the current flowing in the electric actuator is regulated not only by the control algorithm, but also according to its measured value.
By way of example,
In
More specifically, power block 5 comprises a controlled switch 7a connected between terminals 5c and 5e to regulate current flow in electric actuator 8 as a function of the control signal GHS from control stage 9; a controlled switch 7b connected between terminals 5f and 5d to regulate current flow in electric actuator 8 as a function of the control signal GLS from control stage 9; and a recirculating diode 7c with the anode connected to ground terminal 5d, and the cathode connected to output terminal 5e. Diode 7c may be replaced with a third controlled switch acting as a synchronous rectifier.
Power block 5 also comprises a sense stage defined by a sense resistor 10 interposed between controlled switch 7b and ground terminal 5d, and has two output terminals 5g connected to the terminals of sense resistor 10 to supply a measuring voltage Vs proportional to the current flow in sense resistor 10.
Measuring block 2 comprises a first and a second input terminal 2a connected to respective output terminals 5g of power block 5 to receive measuring voltage Vs; a third input terminal 2b supplied by control stage 9 with a signal indicating a current limit threshold SL corresponding, as stated, to the current value to be reached in electric actuator 8 as a result of the commands imparted by control stage 9; and an output terminal 2c connected to and supplying control stage 9 with a comparison signal FBK.
More specifically, measuring block 2 sets comparison signal FBK to a first logic level when the measured current value exceeds limit threshold SL set by control stage 9, and to a second logic level when the measured current value is below limit threshold SL.
In its simplest form, measuring block 2 comprises an amplifying stage 11 defined by a typically differential amplifier; a comparing stage 12 defined by a comparator; and a generating stage 13 which generates threshold voltage SL and is typically defined by a digital/analog converter.
Amplifying stage 11 has two inputs connected to the two input terminals 2a of measuring block 2 to receive measuring voltage Vs, and an output supplying a measurement signal SM indicating a voltage value related to the measured current; and comparing stage 12 has one input connected to and receiving measurement signal SM from the output of amplifying stage 11, another input connected to the output of the generating stage to receive limit threshold SL, and an output connected to output terminal 2c to supply comparing signal FBK to control stage 9.
During operation of control device 1, control stage 9 implements an electric actuator control algorithm to determine, instant by instant, the value of the current supplied to each electric actuator, and accordingly generates control signals GHS and GLS for supply to controlled switches 7a and 7b of the controlled power block 5.
Simultaneously with control of power block 5, control stage 9 assigns an appropriate current value to limit threshold SL, which is coded into a digital signal and supplied to generating stage 13, which provides for digital-analog conversion of the signal for supply to comparing stage 12.
Amplifying stage 11 of measuring block 2 picks up measuring voltage Vs at the terminals of sense resistor 10, and supplies comparing stage 12 with measurement signal SM, which is compared with limit threshold SL by comparing stage 12, which accordingly generates comparison signal FBK for supply to control stage 9.
On receiving comparison signal FBK, control stage 9 is able to determine whether or not the current flow in electric actuator 8 has reached limit threshold SL, and accordingly controls power block 5.
The current detecting method of measuring blocks 2 described above has the major drawback of involving a current measurement error, i.e. offset, preventing optimum control of the electric actuators. Stages 11, 12 and 13 integrated in measuring blocks 2, in fact, each introduce a current measurement error, i.e. offset, thus impairing the accuracy with which the current in the electric actuator is controlled by control stage 9.
It is an object of the present invention to provide an electric actuator control device designed to automatically compensate the total current measurement offset introduced by the various stages in each measuring block, so as to improve current measurement precision and so optimize operation control of the electric actuators.
According to the present invention, there is provided a method of automatically compensating the current measurement offset of an electric actuator control device, as claimed in claim 1.
According to the present invention, there is also provided a device for controlling electric actuators, with automatic current measurement offset compensation, as claimed in claim 7.
A preferred, non-limiting embodiment of the present invention will be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Number 20 in
Electric actuator control device 20 substantially comprises a power circuit 21 having a number of power blocks 22 (four shown in
More specifically, each power block 22 receives two control signals GHS, GLS, as a function of which power block 22 regulates current supply to the relative electric actuator, and supplies a measuring voltage Vs related to the current flow in the electric actuator. In the example shown, each power block 22 is the same as in
Driver circuit 23 comprises a control stage 26 supplying control signals GHS and GLS to power blocks 22 to regulate the current in the electric actuators; and a measuring stage 24 for measuring in each power block 22 the value of the current flow in the electric actuator.
More specifically, measuring stage 24 comprises a number of measuring blocks 25, each for comparing the measured current value and a limit threshold SL indicating the current level to be reached in the controlled electric actuator as a result of the command imparted by control stage 26.
Each measuring block 25 supplies a comparison signal FBK indicating the current flowing in the electric actuator has reached the current value corresponding to the value of limit threshold SL established by control stage 26.
In the example shown, comparison signal FBK has a first logic level when the measured current value is substantially above limit threshold SL; and a second logic level when the measured current value is substantially below limit threshold SL.
Each measuring block 25 is the same as in
Besides implementing a known electric actuator operation control algorithm enabling it to determine and control current supply to each electric actuator at a given instant, control stage 26 also implements a method of compensating the current measurement offsets introduced by the various measuring blocks 25 during current control.
More specifically, according to the compensation strategy, which will be described in detail later on, control stage 26, in cooperation with each measuring block 25, determines the current measurement offset value introduced in the measuring block 25, and memorizes the offset value in a special memory register REGOF forming part of control stage 26. In the example shown, the current offset value of each measuring block 25 is added automatically in control stage 26 to the desired current limit threshold, and the result is the actual value of limit threshold SL supplied by control stage 26 to measuring block 25, thus conveniently zeroing the offset error in comparison signal FBK.
Control stage 26 activates the compensation method when a rest condition of the electric actuator is determined, i.e. when current flow in the electric actuator is zero (block 100). This condition can obviously be determined directly by control stage 26, by virtue of it directly controlling power block 22.
When implementing the offset determination and compensation strategy, control stage 26 disables closed-loop control of power block 22, i.e. disables acquisition of comparison signal FBK for controlling the current of the electric actuator, so as to conveniently eliminate the effect of any compensation strategy signals which may impair control of the electric actuator. In other words, when implementing the present method, the comparison signal FBK supplied by comparing stage 12 is only used by control stage 26 to measure the offset of measuring block 25, and not for direct control of power block 22 (block 110).
At this step, control stage 26 initially enters in register REGOF an initial offset value corresponding, for example, to a zero current value, and assigns this value to current limit threshold SL.
Once the value is assigned, control stage 26 supplies current limit threshold SL to generating stage 13, which converts it to the appropriate format and in turn supplies it to comparing stage 12. At this step, amplifying stage 11 picks up a zero voltage Vs (being measured at the terminals of sense resistor 10 which, at this step, has substantially no current flow), and supplies measurement signal SM to comparing stage 12, the other input of which receives limit threshold SL from generating device 13. Comparing stage 12 then compares the two inputs and, depending on the signals at them, supplies comparison signal FBK.
Control stage 26 receives comparison signal FBK (block 120) and, depending on the logic level of the comparison signal, increases or decreases the value memorized previously in register REGOF. This operation is repeated cyclically until a switch in comparison signal FBK is detected.
In the example shown, if comparison signal FBK has a first, e.g. high, logic level (corresponding to a condition in which measurement signal SM is above the value corresponding to limit threshold SL), then the offset initially memorized in register REGOF is less than the real offset in measuring block 25 (YES output of block 120); and conversely, if comparison signal FBK has a second, e.g. low, logic level (corresponding to a condition in which measurement signal SM is below the value corresponding to limit threshold SL), then the offset value memorized in register REGOF is greater than the real offset in measuring block 25 (NO output of block 120).
In the first case, i.e. if comparison signal FBK has a high logic level, control stage 26 cyclically increases the offset value memorized in register REGOF as long as comparison signal FBK remains unchanged. That is, at each cycle at this step, control stage 26 increases the offset memorized in register REGOF by a predetermined value (block 130), and assigns the updated value to current limit threshold SL, which is converted and supplied to comparing stage 12, which compares it with measurement signal SM and supplies comparison signal FBK. Control stage 26 then determines whether comparison signal FBK from measuring block 25 has switched or not, i.e. changed logic level (block 140).
If it has not, i.e. if comparison signal FBK remains unchanged (NO output of block 140), control stage 26 repeats the cycle, again increasing the offset value memorized in register REGOF by a predetermined value (block 130), assigning the updated offset value to limit threshold SL, and again comparing limit threshold SL and measurement signal SM to determine the logic level of comparison signal FBK (block 140).
Conversely, i.e. if comparison signal FBK has changed logic level (YES output of block 140), control stage 26 ends the measuring procedure: the value memorized in register REGOF is decreased by a predetermined value (block 180), and the result, which corresponds to the real current measurement offset of measuring block 25, is memorized again in register REGOF (block 170).
Conversely, in the second case, i.e. if, in the initial comparison (block 120), comparison signal FBK has a second, e.g. low, logic level (corresponding to a condition in which measurement signal SM is below the value corresponding to limit threshold SL), control stage 26 cyclically decreases the offset value memorized in register REGOF until comparison signal FBK switches from its initial logic level.
That is, at each cycle at this step, control stage 26 decreases the offset memorized in register REGOF by a predetermined value (block 150), and assigns the updated value to current limit threshold SL, which is converted and supplied to comparing stage 12, which compares it with measurement signal SM and supplies comparison signal FBK. Control stage 26 then determines whether or not comparison signal FBK has switched, i.e. changed logic level (block 160).
If it has not, i.e. if comparison signal FBK remains unchanged (NO output of block 160), control stage 26 again decreases the current offset value memorized in register REGOF by a predetermined value, assigns the updated offset value to limit threshold SL, again compares limit threshold SL and measurement signal SM, and again checks the logic level of comparison signal FBK (block 160).
Conversely, i.e. if comparison signal FBK has switched logic level (YES output of block 160), control stage 26 ends the measuring procedure, and the value memorized in register REGOF corresponds to the real offset of measuring block 25 (block 170).
At this point, the value memorized in register REGOF is used by control stage 26 for normal closed-loop control of the electric actuator, to compensate the real offset introduced by the measuring block. More specifically, during control, control stage 26 uses the offset memorized in register REGOF to correct limit threshold SL (used each time as a threshold for comparison with the current measured in the power block). To make the correction, control stage 26, during control, adds the offset memorized in register REGOF to limit threshold SL, thus automatically compensating the real offset introduced in measuring block 25.
The current measurement offset value memorized in register REGOF is used to compensate the offset until the control stage again performs the offset determination procedure, and the updated offset value is entered into register REGOF. This therefore provides for also compensating offsets varying slowly with time.
The electric actuator control device has the big advantage of automatically compensating the total current measurement offset introduced by each measuring block, thus ensuring highly accurate current measurement and, hence, optimum operation control of the electric actuators, with no need for any additional electronic components or devices.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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04425277.3 | Apr 2004 | EP | regional |